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The essay in its purest form uses words
to establish ideas addressed directly
by the essayist to the reader. On this
basis we can see that its essential
quality is persuasion. The essay is
a form of literature. It may be surprising
because we have read numerous essays
that we would not consider literary
at all. In fact, many essays are not
literary in any respect.
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Many are completely practical
pieces of writing, designed
to report something, or explain
something, or make a case for
something. Essayists like Virginia
Woolf seek to create an experience
that is valuable for its own
sake, and they do so by using
language imaginatively, as in
other forms of literature. Pleasure
is the last thing we expect
of an essay, but it was certainly
the first thing on her mind.
And the kind of pleasure she
had in mind was what we commonly
expect of literature –
that it temporarily remove us
from the world of everyday affairs
by immersing us in the world
of the imagination. |
The essay
is a very flexible form and has been
so ever since it originated with the
sixteenth-century French writer Montaigne.
He used it as a means of exploring himself
and his ideas about human experience,
and his essays were, in a sense, a means
of thinking on paper, of trying things
out in writing. And he deliberately
emphasized their tentative and informal
quality by calling them essais,
a term he derived for the French verb
essayer – to try. The
tern “essay” has since come
to be used as a catch-all for non-fictional
prose work of limited length, but that
description of the form turns out to
be misleading. Some essays are fiction,
and some essays are very long. Essays
may be long or short, factual or fictional,
practical or playful. They may serve
any purpose and take any form that an
essayist wants to try out.
The essay
is a pure form which uses words to establish
ideas that are addressed directly by
the essayist to the reader. Thus, its
essential quality is persuasion. But
there is the proximity of the four forms
–essays, fiction, poetry, and
drama – to one another. Each of
the forms is capable of using the elements,
techniques, or even strategies of the
other forms. The essay, then, is not
confined to the form of straightforward
persuasion, it may also be narrative,
or dramatic, or poetic in form. Or an
essay may involve a combination of the
forms; and the longer it is; the more
likely it will be to combine the various
possibilities of form in rich and complex
ways.
In its
pure form the essay explicitly attempts
to persuade us of something by means
of an appeal and argument that the author
addresses directly to us, much as any
public speaker would address an audience.
In a narrative essay the author becomes
a narrator, a storyteller, who reports
directly to us on persons and events.
A narrative essay sees its subject in
time and presents it in the form of
history. A dramatic essay takes the
form of a dialogue between two or more
characters, and the author is present,
if at all, only to perform the duties
of a director to set the scene and identify
the characters whose words and actions
are to be witnessed by the reader. An
essay is poetic to the extent that its
author or speaker appears to be talking
to himself rather than to others. A
poetic essay takes the form of a mediation
“overheard” by the reader.
In approaching
an essay we should first read it through
for our own pleasure. Following this
first reading, we should review it quickly
and assign it tentatively to one of
four types.
If the
essay is directly persuasive-argumentative,
we should read it a second time, more
analytically than the first time. Then
we should examine its arrangement to
see how the author has structured his
persuasion. We should examine its arguments,
particularly any analogies used or assertions
made, for (a) their accuracy in themselves,
and (b) the extent of their relevance
to the point being made. We should consider
any assumptions required by these assertions
or analogies. Then we should consider
the personality of the essayist and
the kind of role it invites you to play.
Finally, formulate your response to
the view presented and evaluate the
presentation.
If the
essay in narrative, we should pay attention
to its narrative elements in our second
reading. We should try to divide the
story into its meaningful parts and
consider the way of description, dialogue,
and commentary works in each part-how
they contribute to the events being
narrated. After we have focused on these
elements, we should look for passages
of special thematic import in which
the author steps back from the story
to comment on its significance, to offer
an interpretation of the story. We should
consider the persuasive force of the
story in supporting the ideas the author
is proposing. Then we should consider
the implied personality of the essayist
both during the narrative sections and
the interpretive parts, and how that
affects our response to the essay. Finally,
we might ask ourselves if we find the
essay convincing-both as narrative and
persuasive.
If the
essay is meditative, our re-readings
should be especially close and careful
in their attention to the associative
play of mind with words, images, and
ideas. We should consider how one detail
generates, or suggests, another, and
explain, if we can, the process that
leads the author from one detail or
idea to the next. The sort of examination
that we think of as appropriate for
poetry is appropriate for the meditative
essay as well. We should pay special
attention, then, to tone and imagery.
Only after we have made an investigation
of this kind should we begin to ask
questions about the persuasive dimension
of the essay.
If the
essay is in dialogue form, our second
reading should concentrate on its dramatic
elements – character, setting,
and plot. We should consider whether
any one character seems to speak with
the author’s authority behind
him, and if we feel this to be the case,
we should investigate the details that
have led us to that view, in order to
determine whether the evidence is really
sufficient for this to be an appropriate
response. We should be alert for any
words of scene-setting as this may be
a way of inserting some narrative commentary
into a dialogue. The scene-setter may
speak with the author’s voice.
Finally, we should look for some dramatic
movement toward a climax, in order to
determine the relation between the dramatic
form and the persuasive purpose of the
essay.
Any essay
my in fact be a combination of the basic
forms, and the longer it is, the more
likely to combine the various possibilities
in rich and complex ways. We should
try to be tactful and vary our approach
to suit the variations in the work we
are reading. We should remember that
reading an essay or any other work of
literature, like carrying on a human
relationship, requires attentiveness,
flexibility, and responsiveness.
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